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#language#rego#interesting#zoltan#mercury#written#https#prolog#last#why

Discussion (23 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

mattgoupil•about 8 hours ago
Something you might find interesting to look at is Rego, a datalog-derived language been used for writing security policies. Rego is dynamically typed, so no real protection. It's input is basically JSON and it can apply JSON-Schema, but that's it. I think it would be interesting to look at Rego as a restricted version of this and see what types buys for a Rego user. It's probably one of the larger areas of logic programming and has brought people into the fold, so to speak.
ElectroSlayer•about 18 hours ago
Oh wow, Zoltan was one of my lecturers at UniMelb, and in one semester we were tasked with learning his Mercury language. So good to see it thriving still.
zeafoamrun•about 13 hours ago
I TA-ed for Zoltan's 2nd year "learning how to use bash/gdb/etc" class and it was a lot of fun. I hope they're still teaching that class.
angry_octet•about 8 hours ago
It was called "433-252 Software Engineering Principles & Tools" until ~2008 I think (433-244 before that) but then it seems to have been reorganised. Tbh, Unimelb Comp Sci is a shadow of it's former self, a victim of the 'Melbourne Model' common core sausage factory concept.
ofrzeta•about 8 hours ago
Is it the same model as the "Bologna process" in Europe, which is kind of funny because "Bologna" also refers to a type of sausage in the US of A.
angry_octet•about 8 hours ago
I hope he's stopped drinking Fanta.
5-•about 13 hours ago
prince, a high quality html renderer used for typesetting, is written in mercury:

https://www.princexml.com/doc/acknowledgements/

srean•about 6 hours ago
Was it written in Prolog at any point in time ?

Perhaps I am misremembering, but my brain is telling me of a CSS or PDF parser written in Prolog.

thechao•about 18 hours ago
The closest that I could find to a "what the fuck is this?" page is:

https://www.mercurylang.org/about.html

ororroro•about 18 hours ago
There are files in this repository that were last touched 32 years ago. Any reason to be posting it now?
kaonwarb•about 16 hours ago
Not that it necessarily applies here, but as a heuristic: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindy_effect
ororroro•about 16 hours ago
Interesting point. My understanding of Mercury is that it is hard carried by Zoltan so it has a bus factor of 1.
zeafoamrun•about 13 hours ago
I always understood it was a teaching language for students who wanted to get programming language implementation experience.
epgui•about 17 hours ago
Why is that relevant or noteworthy? There are files that were updated recently too.
ororroro•about 17 hours ago
Why the aggression? This language while cool has existed for decades and never taken off. I just wanted a reason to believe it relevant so I could have an excuse to take another look.
hackyhacky•about 17 hours ago
Why do you think "oldest untouched file" is a good metric for relevance? Do you know what is the oldest untouched file in gcc or Python?
srean•about 6 hours ago
"Taking off" is an unreliable metric of capability and fitness to a problem you may want solved.
epgui•about 7 hours ago
There was no aggression.
zeafoamrun•about 13 hours ago
Damn dude you're making me feel old
KnuthIsGod•about 16 hours ago
Last release was in 2023.

It is effectively dead.

This is a terrible shame, because this would have been an nice modern alternative to Prolog.

kryptiskt•about 14 hours ago
Last commit was 2 minutes ago. Seems like a better measure than releases, different projects have different release cadences.
jamwise•about 15 hours ago
But the repo has had fairly consistent commits since then. Not huge activity, but not sure I'd call it dead.
wduquette•about 6 hours ago
You say “dead”, I say “stable”. Not everyone wants to base their work on a moving target.